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Boundary Waters Quetico Forum Winter Camping and Activities Winter camping boots Reply |
Previous Messages: | |
Author | Message Text |
Pinetree |
02/04/2018 09:09AM Winter camping much of the time means water on the lake often. You need a waterproof bottom at least around camp many times. |
OldFingers57 |
02/04/2018 08:02AM I have used a Keen Summit County boot for several years now with my snowshoes. They have worked great for me. My feet have stayed warm in them with just a pair of Smartwool ski/snowboard socks down to -20 temps. Very comfortable for me to wear all day. |
tg |
02/03/2018 10:50PM I would probably steer you towards an insulated hiking boot. Not too bulky and will fit in universal bindings of the altai hoks that you're looking at. When you're moving/working your toes will stay warm. Mine are not waterproof and I think that helps them dry out. To address that I have a pair of Neos overshoes (adventurer model from a few years ago). With those on I am slush proof and they probably add a few degrees of warmth because they function like an external vapor barrier. Having a dry warm boot for camp/fishing is mandatory so your moon boots prolly still have a role. tg |
SevenofNine |
02/02/2018 06:54PM Steger Arctic Mukluks are very comfortable and warm but they have their limitations (not waterproof). I strap mine into my snowshoes. I’ve used them at -20 and have been very warm. Unless you have some universal binding how are you going to get anything other than a dedicated ski boot onto your skis? |
Lailoken |
02/02/2018 05:47PM Any suggestions for best winter camping boot for ease to walk, strap into skis, put on snowshoes, without taking them off? I've got some Baffin Bay boots, got cheap in Ely at surplus store, but they are total moon boots, rated to -140 and way to big for most ski bindings. I'm a size 10 and these are huge. Thanks |